island
09-03-2005, Wed 8:29 PM
من المتوقع ان تحقق شركة نما ارباح لعام 2005 بسبب ارتفاع اسعار منتجاتها واهمها (الصودا الكاوية) حيث ان الشركة ذكرت زيادة انتاجها الى 100 الف طن والتوقعات تشير الى كسر حاجز 300 دولار للطن خلال عام 2005
لوحسبنا 1000 ريال للطن ضرب 100 الف الناتج 100 مليون ريال من الصودا فقط
مع العلم ان اقصى سعر للطن تحقق عام 1996 وكان 365 للطن
وهذا توقع لمحلل اقتصادي امريكي يتوقع ان تكسر الصودا حاجز 300 دولار للطن خلال النصف الاول من عام 2005 بسبب تزايد الطلب العالمي ويتوقع وصوله الى 365 للطن لتوصل الى قمة اسعارها مرة اخرى وذكر المحلل ان الطلب على الصودا يتزايد بشكل ملحوظ
Caustic prices expected to past $300 soon
Purchasing staff
Purchasing November 8, 2004
Caustic soda prices soared to $295/metric ton in October, almost three times the level in the spring. Some market analysts see the $300 barrier being broached soon, and expect prices to rise well above that in the first half of next year. Industry insiders say that’s because of tightened supply due to a combination of high demand and scheduled maintenance shutdown
For years, the caustic soda chemical industry had too much production capacity and there was no significant increase in demand. But now, the industry is in a period where rising demand has matched effective capacity. Complicating things: chemical makers generally are seeing sales rise by 7% to 8% this year, but raw material prices are rising anywhere from 12% to 25%. That’s why analysts such as Edwin Chee at BMO Nesbitt Burns suggest “a likelihood of prices” rising as high as the $365/metric ton level that they reached during the last cycle peak in 1995-1996. Some industry economists wonder, though, if the suppliers will be able to match that cyclical peak because, as Gary Shoesmith says: “Buyers aren’t gentle any more; they've learned how to be tough with their suppliers.” So, even with chloralkali prices spiking, the increasing costs for raw materials are forcing suppliers to rethink supply strategies, says Shoesmith, an economics professor at Wake Forest University and a former chemicals economist for Phillips Petroleum Co. He says rising sales at a time of rising costs for energy and raw materials is leaving many chemical makers with a tough decision: turn away some new business, or stay busy but bring less to the bottom line.
لوحسبنا 1000 ريال للطن ضرب 100 الف الناتج 100 مليون ريال من الصودا فقط
مع العلم ان اقصى سعر للطن تحقق عام 1996 وكان 365 للطن
وهذا توقع لمحلل اقتصادي امريكي يتوقع ان تكسر الصودا حاجز 300 دولار للطن خلال النصف الاول من عام 2005 بسبب تزايد الطلب العالمي ويتوقع وصوله الى 365 للطن لتوصل الى قمة اسعارها مرة اخرى وذكر المحلل ان الطلب على الصودا يتزايد بشكل ملحوظ
Caustic prices expected to past $300 soon
Purchasing staff
Purchasing November 8, 2004
Caustic soda prices soared to $295/metric ton in October, almost three times the level in the spring. Some market analysts see the $300 barrier being broached soon, and expect prices to rise well above that in the first half of next year. Industry insiders say that’s because of tightened supply due to a combination of high demand and scheduled maintenance shutdown
For years, the caustic soda chemical industry had too much production capacity and there was no significant increase in demand. But now, the industry is in a period where rising demand has matched effective capacity. Complicating things: chemical makers generally are seeing sales rise by 7% to 8% this year, but raw material prices are rising anywhere from 12% to 25%. That’s why analysts such as Edwin Chee at BMO Nesbitt Burns suggest “a likelihood of prices” rising as high as the $365/metric ton level that they reached during the last cycle peak in 1995-1996. Some industry economists wonder, though, if the suppliers will be able to match that cyclical peak because, as Gary Shoesmith says: “Buyers aren’t gentle any more; they've learned how to be tough with their suppliers.” So, even with chloralkali prices spiking, the increasing costs for raw materials are forcing suppliers to rethink supply strategies, says Shoesmith, an economics professor at Wake Forest University and a former chemicals economist for Phillips Petroleum Co. He says rising sales at a time of rising costs for energy and raw materials is leaving many chemical makers with a tough decision: turn away some new business, or stay busy but bring less to the bottom line.